The Shoulder
The Shoulder
71
Car accidentshearty-crane-091

Just finished paying off my car and got rear-ended the same week. Of course.

I swear the universe has a sick sense of humor.

I made my final car payment last Tuesday. Last Tuesday. I even took a picture of the confirmation screen because I was so proud of myself — took me almost four years of tight budgets and picking up extra shifts. The car is finally mine.

Five days later I'm sitting at a complete stop in a turn lane waiting for a gap in traffic and some guy plows into my rear bumper. Not a little tap — like a real hit. My head snapped back, the trunk is crumpled, and one of my tail lights is just... gone.

The other driver was apologetic and we exchanged info. His insurance accepted liability pretty quickly which I guess is good? But now I'm in a rental that smells like an air freshener factory while my car sits at a body shop.

Here's what's stressing me out beyond the car stuff: my neck has been really stiff and sore since it happened, and I've got this dull headache that won't fully go away. I didn't go to the ER that day because I felt okay in the moment — adrenaline I guess — but now I'm wondering if I should get checked out.

Also the adjuster from the other guy's insurance already called me twice and wants to talk through "the details of my claim." Something about that feels rushed? Like why are they in such a hurry?

I'm not a litigious person at all. I just want my car fixed and to feel normal again. Is this how it usually goes? Should I be worried about those adjuster calls?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 10
    hearty-newt-821

    Oh man, the timing is just brutal. I'm sorry. Something almost identical happened to me — finally felt financially stable and then boom, rear-ended out of nowhere. One thing I'll say: please go get checked out by a doctor. I also felt "fine-ish" at first and waited a few days. Turned out I had soft tissue stuff in my neck that took months to sort out. Don't wait on that part.

  • 19
    silent-raven-873

    Those early adjuster calls are a red flag IMO. They're not calling to be nice — they want to get a recorded statement from you and close your claim fast before you know how hurt you actually are. Do NOT give a recorded statement yet, especially with symptoms still showing up. Once you settle, that's it. There's no going back.

    • 7
      level-sidewalk758

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 16
    hearty-wolf-571

    I used to work on the carrier side and I'll be straight with you — when an adjuster calls multiple times in the first week, it's usually because the claim has soft tissue injury written all over it and they want to lock you in early. That's not cynical, that's just how it works internally. You're under zero obligation to give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. You can just say you're still treating and you'll be in touch. That's completely within your rights.

    • 12
      quick-sparrow-380

      A couple of practical things: First, start a simple notes doc on your phone and jot down every symptom, every day, even if it seems minor. Sleep problems, headaches, stiffness, whatever. That kind of contemporaneous record is genuinely useful later. Second, if you do talk to the adjuster, stick to basic facts only — no speculation about how you feel or what your injuries "probably" are. And seriously consider at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you say much more to them. Most do free consultations and you're not committing to anything.

  • 13
    bold-otter-278

    Please go get seen, even if it feels like "just stiffness." Whiplash-type injuries from rear-end collisions can be sneaky — symptoms sometimes worsen over the first 48-72 hours and then you're playing catch-up. Headaches after a jolt like that should always be evaluated. An urgent care or your primary care doc can document everything too, which matters a lot if this drags out with insurance.

    • 2
      curious-neighbor759

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 20
    hearty-swan-151

    Not legal advice, but — the fact that liability was accepted quickly is good news. What matters now is making sure your medical situation is fully documented before any settlement conversations happen. People often underestimate how long soft tissue recovery takes, and insurers know this. At minimum, get evaluated by a doctor so there's a medical record tied to this incident. That protects you regardless of what you decide to do next.

    • 8
      brave-wren-144

      Four years of payments and this happens five days later?? I would be absolutely losing my mind. I really hope you're okay — the neck and headache stuff genuinely worries me more than the car. Please go get looked at. The car stuff will sort itself out but your health comes first.

  • 8
    swift-vole-508

    Three things: Go to a doctor today or tomorrow, not next week. Don't do a recorded statement with their adjuster until you know the full picture of your injuries. And get at least one free consult with a personal injury lawyer before you agree to anything — it costs you nothing and could save you a lot. That's it. Do those three things.

    • 0
      weathered-mile-marker278

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 14
    warm-wolf-861

    It really does feel like a gut punch timing-wise, I get it. But honestly, the fact that liability is already accepted puts you in a better position than a lot of people who come here. You have leverage — use it carefully. Get the medical stuff documented, don't rush anything, and you might actually come out of this okay. Hang in there.